logo
England edges Argentina 22-17 with Van Poortvliet's last-minute try

England edges Argentina 22-17 with Van Poortvliet's last-minute try

Japan Todaya day ago
rugby union
Jack van Poortvliet's last-gasp try earned England a 22-17 win over Argentina and another test series victory in Pumas country on Saturday.
An England team without 15 British and Irish Lions upheld its record of never losing a series in Argentina since the first tour in 1981.
The match was headed for a 17-17 draw until, with a minute left, Argentina spilled possession on its 40-meter line and England counterattacked. Replacement back-rower Guy Pepper burst into the open, ran over or drew the last three defenders and gave backup scrumhalf Van Poortvliet a clear run to the tryline.
George Ford couldn't convert from the sideline, missing his first goalkick off the tee in the two tests, but the tour captain was rapt with his young team's success against a Pumas team which beat the Lions three weeks ago.
'We found a way in the end,' Ford said. 'We had a lot of opportunities in the 22 but we just couldn't execute. I like our fight, our togetherness, showing how much we care for each other. We should have scored more tries but the attitude of the group is great.'
After a ding-dong first half in which the lead swapped four times, Ford's tying penalty was the only score in the second half until the end. England spent most of the second spell in Argentina's half but the Pumas hustled and scrambled in defense.
Overall, England had 17 visits in Argentina's 22 in the match but scored only three tries. But it was just enough after hammering the Pumas 35-12 in La Plata last weekend.
Ford's crossfield kick to five-cap wing Tom Roebuck was supported by debutant Luke Northmore to feed one-cap center partner Seb Atkinson for the opening try.
Then, while England's Ben Curry was in the sin-bin for head contact, livewire Pumas scrumhalf Simón Benítez Cruz set up Lucio Cinti's try.
England fullback Freddie Steward made a good pickup of wing Will Muir's long pass to score, but Steward conceded the lead to Argentina on halftime when a Santiago Carreras chip at the goal post rebounded kindly for Ignacio Mendy to touch down.
Ford rubbed out the Pumas' three-point halftime lead with his only penalty kick.
Argentina seemed to be under siege for almost the entire second half. It successfully defended with 14 men after No. 8 Pablo Matera was sin-binned for laying offside in a tryline ruck. It was a professional foul by Matera, who became the Pumas' record caps holder in his 111th test.
But even while giving away a welter of penalties, the Pumas stubbornly held on. Until the last minute.
© Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

TENNIS/ Wang Ziying of China wins women's wheelchair singles at Wimbledon by beating Yui Kamiji of Japan
TENNIS/ Wang Ziying of China wins women's wheelchair singles at Wimbledon by beating Yui Kamiji of Japan

Asahi Shimbun

time4 hours ago

  • Asahi Shimbun

TENNIS/ Wang Ziying of China wins women's wheelchair singles at Wimbledon by beating Yui Kamiji of Japan

Wang Ziying of China, left, celebrates with the trophy after beating Yui Kamiji of Japan, right, to win the final women's wheelchair singles match at the Wimbledon Tennis Championships in London, Saturday, July 12, 2025. (PA via AP) Wang Ziying of China won her first Grand Slam title in women's wheelchair singles by beating top-seeded Yui Kamiji of Japan 6-3, 6-3 on Saturday at Wimbledon. Wang had lost eight of her previous nine matches against Kamiji, who has 10 major titles in singles and was looking to complete a career Grand Slam with a first championship at Wimbledon. But Wang converted her fifth set point in the first set after a marathon game that went to deuce nine times, and then clinched victory on her first match point when Kamiji netted a backhand. In the men's wheelchair doubles final, No. 2 seeds Martin De la Puente of Spain and Ruben Spaargaren of the Netherlands won their first Wimbledon title by beating top-seeded British duo Alfie Hewett and Gordon Reid 7-6 (1), 7-5. Hewett and Reid have won six Wimbledon doubles titles, including the last two.

Oda beats defending champion Hewett to win 2nd Wimbledon title in wheelchair singles
Oda beats defending champion Hewett to win 2nd Wimbledon title in wheelchair singles

Japan Today

time5 hours ago

  • Japan Today

Oda beats defending champion Hewett to win 2nd Wimbledon title in wheelchair singles

Tokito Oda of Japan holds the trophy after winning the men's wheelchair singles final match against and Alfie Hewett of Britain 3-6, 7-5, 6-2 at the Wimbledon Tennis Championships in London on Sunday. tennis Tokito Oda of Japan won his second Wimbledon title by beating his biggest rival and defending champion Alfie Hewett of Britain 3-6, 7-5, 6-2 Sunday in the men's wheelchair singles final. Oda and Hewett have won the last 10 Grand Slam titles between them and this was the seventh time in that span that they met in the final. On Sunday, Oda was broken four times in the opening set but saved both break points he faced in the decider and then converted his fourth match point. This was the 19-year-old Oda's sixth major title overall, while the 27-year-old Hewett was looking for his 11th. It was a second runner-up finish in two days for Hewett, who also lost the doubles final together with Gordon Reid. The British duo was defeated 7-6 (1), 7-5 by Martin De la Puente of Spain and Ruben Spaargaren of the Netherlands. © 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

Merlier doubles up as Van der Poel denied epic win at Tour de France
Merlier doubles up as Van der Poel denied epic win at Tour de France

Japan Today

time5 hours ago

  • Japan Today

Merlier doubles up as Van der Poel denied epic win at Tour de France

cycling By Damian McCALL Tim Merlier won stage nine of the Tour de France at Chateauroux on Sunday after a heroic long-range escape from Mathieu van der Poel was caught in the final kilometer. There was no change atop the overall standings with Tadej Pogacar now holding a 54-second advantage over Remco Evenepoel in second with French starlet Kevin Vauquelin third. This was a second Tour win for Soudal Quick-Step sprinter Merlier this year, who was first across the line on stage three at Dunkirk. Merlier was led in by team leader Evenepoel. "It's mad, we are supposed to be helping him (Evenepoel) but he's helping us," Merlier said. "I need to make it through the mountains now, I won't be any use to Remco there, but I want to help him in the other ones," said the 32-year-old. On a sun drenched slog from the Chinon vineyards, Van der Poel and a teammate broke early and built up a lead of 5 minutes, 30 seconds on the flat roads to Chateauroux. Jonas Rickaert won the combativity award for accompanying Van der Poel to within 10km of the line before slumping over his handlebars. "I'm really happy. That was one of his (Rickaert) dreams, to win the combativity award and that's why we went," Van der Poel explained. "In the end we nearly made it but we hadn't expected to get that far," he said of his 173km breakaway at an average speed on 49.9kph. As with many heroic exploits, their epic escape was ultimately doomed to a gut wrenching narrow failure. But with his gung-ho all-in style Van der Poel grew his Tour de France legend here despite being caught with 700m to go, the plaudits will be both his and Merlier's. "It's hard to not be able to finish it off, but we put on a good show," said the Dutch rider. As Van der Poel was reeled in, it looked as though Jonathan Milan would win a second consecutive stage but Merlier got ahead with 30m remaining as Milan finished second with Arnaud De Lie completing the podium. Road signs in honor of British cycling great Mark Cavendish had been placed at entry points to Chateauroux -- reading Cavendish City -- in homage to the now-retired 40-year-old, after he won three stages there in 2008, 2011 and 2021. Pogacar's Tour de France defense took a hit Sunday as his key teammate Joao Almeida threw in the towel two days after his nasty fall at the Mur de Bretagne, where he fractured a rib. "It's a big loss he was in good shape. He's our hero. I was suffering today so I understand how he must have felt. Every respect to him," the Slovenian said. Stage 10 should shake up the race with eight classified climbs in the Massif Central on the July 14 French national holiday. After finishing in the peloton on Sunday, Pogacar was already looking ahead to Monday's mountainous 165.3km slog. "Visma have a strong team for tomorrow and I think Jonas (Vingegaard) will be ready," Pogacar said of his great Danish rival. "There will be attacks from the main contenders, it's up and down all day. "I'm pretty confident in my team though. I'm looking forward to the hard stages," added the 26-year-old three-time champion. © 2025 AFP

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store